English, asked by neelamdalal0987, 3 months ago

You ________ him up because he has already come up.

a. shouldn't have called

b. needn't have called

c. wouldn't have called

d. couldn't have called

ii. I ________ move the table. It was too heavy.

a. mustn’t

b. wouldn’t

c. shouldn’t

d. couldn’t

iii. Drivers ________ stop when the traffic lights are red.

a. must

b. could

c. may

d. should

iv. She last drove a car three years ago. Since she ________ an

accident, she ________ a car for three years.

a. had, hasn’t driven

b. had had, didn't drive

c. has, hasn’t driven

d. had had, hasn’t driven

v. A new hotel ______ in the centre of town.

a. is building

b. built

c. is built

d. is being built

vi. I ______ late for school again this morning. The teacher was not

happy.

a. arrived

b. am arriving

c. arrive

d. have arrived​

Answers

Answered by anusha195sl
0

Answer:

Multiple choice Questions

Explanation:

choose the correct answer from the following:

i. You ________ him up because he has already come up.

Answer: d. wouldn't have called

ii. I ________ move the table. It was too heavy.

Answer: d. couldn’t

iii. Drivers ________ stop when the traffic lights are red.

Answer: a. must

iv. She last drove a car three years ago. Since she ________ an accident, she ________ a car for three years.

Answer: c. has, hasn’t driven

v. A new hotel ______ in the centre of town.

Answer: a. is building

vi. I ______ late for school again this morning. The teacher was not

happy.

Answer: d. have arrived

Therefore, it is a English grammar questions.

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Answered by ChhutiMistry1
0

Answer:

You needn't have called him up because he has already come up.

ii. I couldn't move the table. It was too heavy.

iii. Drivers must stop when the traffic lights are red.

iv. She last drove a car three years ago. Since she had had an accident, she didn't drive a car for three years.

v. A new hotel is being built in the centre of town.

vi. I arrived late for school again this morning. The teacher was not happy.

Explanation:

A noun can be said to be a word that generally functions as the name of a specific object or set of objects, like living creatures, places, actions, qualities, states of existence, or ideas. Lexical categories are usually defined in terms of the ways in which their members combine with other kinds of expressions. A verb can be said to be a word that in syntax generally conveys an action, an event, or a state of being. Within the general description of English, the essential form, with or without the particle to, is the infinitive. In many other languages, verbs are inflected to encode tense, aspect, mood, and voice.

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